I have the specialized carpentry skills and knowledge required to repair and replace rotten, split and otherwise damaged wood, including:

Full Window and Door Replacements

Decorative and Other Exterior Trim

Interior Moldings and Trim

Other general carpentry repairs

Eg. Repairing a damaged home to prepare it for painting

The owners of a Marshfield home called me in to repaint their wood trim and pointed out wood that had rotted, including a window sill that was infested with insects and a facia board under a gutter that had a gaping hole in it, where it had rotted away.

When I examined the home more thoroughly, I discovered that six more sills were rotten and the wood trim had split severely in a number of places, due to the paint wearing away. All of this wood had to be replaced.

I removed some of the storm windows and gutters and carefully removed the rotten wood. I sawed off some of the wood ends by hand.

Only the outside length of the rotten window sills needed replacing. I cut off the rotten parts and recut new pieces to fit. This involved making five precisely angled cuts to recreate each piece. The new pieces fit perfectly, for a seamless look and proper drainage away from the windows.

I spent over a week crafting new window, edge and decorative trim; and window sills, using pressure treated wood for the sills and pre-primed pine for the rest. The home owners were very happy with the results.
(See before and after photos below.)

After decades of New England seaside weather, these decorative trim boards were rotting and unsightly. The trim was hand-crafted, primed and painted to match the original trim.

Animals had managed to eat away these facia boards beneath a gutter. The gutter was removed, and the structure was rebuilt, primed and painted.

Water dripping from a window air conditioner caused the window sill to rot away completely. The old sill was removed, and a new one was fabricated to fit into the existing structure.
(This is also a good example of how powerwashing can remove mold and restore shingles to their natural hue.)

The paint had worn away, leaving the wood exposed to the harsh New England weather. The rotten wood was removed. The remaining trim was sanded, puttied, primed and painted.

This Andersen bay window was installed and finished to reproduce the look of the original. Three coats of oil polyurethane should hold up on the inside while the outside is finished in Duration.